Week 3 Written Assignment
The empirical article that I reviewed is from 2011 by the authors from Nova Southern University, Diane L. Falco and Tina L. Freiburger. This is one of the 3 you offered for us to do.
OVERVIEW
The death penalty is the most severe punishment in the U.S. criminal justice system. Public support for the harsh policy is the number one reason for its continued use as the form of capital punishment. American public support of such a system needs a form of measurement to ensure that as the public opinion is scrutinized, it is also a representation of the public’s observation of the death penalty measure. Public support then needs to have a quantitative way of measuring opinion using the most up to date line of questions with more options to cover answers more rationally. This should be more precise than the old way of answering either “yes” or “no” to study questions.
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DESCRIPTION OF THE RESEARCH PROBLEM Previous
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For example, individuals focused more on demographics of the victim and offender (e.g., age, gender, non-criminal behavior of the victim) than on legally relevant factors (e.g., multiple victims, act committed with other felonies) when deciding whether to sentence a defendant to death. When the considerations of age, gender and emotional factors were explained this often led to participants applying stricter standards to the circumstances that warranted an offense as death penalty eligible than the standards deemed by many states’ laws. Although each scenario was based on an actual death penalty case, several participants who supported the death penalty only supported it when the victim was a child or when there were multiple victims. Participants’ unwillingness to sentence offenders to death in the depicted scenarios may show that their standards are more severe than legal
Some victims of violent crimes were in the hands of mentally ill or handicapped people. These mentally ill people that kill, do not usually kill out of a lack of moral grounding or "evil". These people typically either do not understand right from wrong or are unable to comprehend the possible outcomes the murder may have on themselves or others around them. Although most mentally ill people do not end up on death row, receiving instead long sentencing or treatment, the number of people who have been executed that were unknowingly mentally ill or had similar faulty thinking, and a potential for rehabilitation cannot be known. Also, capital punishment may normalize or rationalize murder.
In recent years, anti-death penalty propagandists have succeeded in stoking the fear that capital punishment is being carelessly meted out. Ironically, Of the 875 prisoners executed in the United States in modern times, not one has been retroactively proved innocent. The benefits of a legal system in which judges and juries have the option of sentencing the cruelest or coldest murderers to death far outweigh the potential risk of executing an innocent person. First and foremost, the death penalty makes it possible for justice to be done to those who commit the worst of all crimes. The execution of a murderer sends a powerful moral message: that the innocent life he took was so precious, and the crime he committed so horrific, that he forfeits
Pressure to create a successful team runs high in the world of NCAA Football, often leading to immoral and illegal behavior by school programs. SMU fell victim to the pressures leading to illegal payments towards players. When discovered, the NCAA placed the "death penalty" on SMU and changed recruitment policies in an effort to cut down on abuses by colleges. SMU has forever been affected by the 1 year suspension having only 2 winning seasons since 1986-1988 (SMU Death Penalty). There actions have surely changed recruiting at the college level tremendously.
The death penalty is a serious thing in the United States of America, and the three branches of government, the executive, the legislative, and the judicial branch all take the death penalty very seriously; the executive branch include the military, and the executive branch has to make decisions and enforce death penalty laws within the military; the judicial branch of government has to decide who should and who should not face the death penalty; the legislative branch for each state has to decide on laws on the death penalty for their state. The executive branch is in charge of the military. When a member of the military commits a serious crime, they are sometimes punished with the death penalty. In the past 100 years, the Army has used the death penalty on 135 people in the military.
Rough Draft Is the death penalty an effective and justified punishment? This is a topic many Americans have discussed for a long time, and has caused much controversy. Both sides have their pros and cons, and they will be discussed. The first point that many people have about capital punishment is that it’s unconstitutional.
Another issue that was discussed is the inequality of death penalty in practice. There have been serious issues with racial discrimination. For reference in cases with white victims and black defendants convictions occurred twenty two percent of the time while with black victims and white defendants with percentage dropped to a measly three
An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, all these phrases are associated with the death penalty. The death penalty, a concept that has been around since the dawn of human existence, has been a controversy in recent decades in the United States, with strong support and strong disagreement. However, even though it is supported by a large amount of states, and has been found to be in the lines of the Constitution it still violates one thing, ethical reasoning. Principle of Utility assert that a concept’s actions or behaviors are right in so far as they promote happiness or pleasure, wrong as they tend to produce unhappiness or pain. The death penalty does not.
Death Penalty According to the 2010 Gallup Poll, 64% of the United State of America are supporting the death penalty, I as an American am part of that 36% that is against it. I do not believe that we as human being should determine whether another person should live or die. A second reason that I am against the death penalty is for the reason that the accused person could be innocent and normally the accused person only has one court presentation and is only judged by the judge not a jury of their peer, and is sent to death row where they pay for a crime that they haven’t done. My final reason that i do not believe that the death penalty should count as a punishment for the American people is because, a person that has done a massive massacre shouldn’t just be able to leave the world just like that without paying and suffering for what they have done, Or should the death punishment continue as it is for it has a great benefit to us as citizens of the United States.
Capital Punishment is the death penalty for those who commit murder. The thought behind this punishment is a life for a life. There has been debate on if the death penalty is right or wrong. Some poeple want the death penalty to be illegal while others argue it is needed to deter crime. There are many valid arguments regarding the death penalty.
According to the findings, the homicide rates exhibited in the New England regions was low compared to that in northern states in the Middle West, which exhibited increased homicides despite the use of capital punishment on the capital offenders. The study pointed out that the occurrence of the homicides despite the use of capital punishment by the courts reveals the depth of social and economic issues that need redress to ensure adequate control of the homicides. Van den Haag & Conrad (2013, p.36) equally pointed out that the key social economic issues that require redress to ensure complete subdue of the homicides include drug use, unemployment rates, reinforcement of socially acceptable behaviors through institutions and religious approaches, and providing rehabilitation services for the offenders. According to the study, such issues could have a transformative impact on the offenders compared to the use of capital punishment in tackling the
Research has indicated some advantages to abolishing the death penalty. Long term imprisonment is far more expensive than the death penalty in the end. A study of the death penalty in California in 2011 showed that the cost of housing a death- row inmate is $100,000 more per year than the cost of housing someone sentenced to life without parole. The process is dragged out too long, costing way too much time and money. As Chammah stated, “The American death penalty system is so slow, inconsistent and inefficient that it costs far more than life without parole.”
The Death Penalty Imagine that someone goes to one of your family members and does something horrible. Maybe this person rapes your family member or kidnaps them. What if this person even murders your family member? If they go to court for this, they may get sentenced to life in prison with no further punishments. If you were in this situation, what would you want to happen to the person that committed this crime?
Only 39 out of all 50 states in America authorize the death penalty and out of those 39, only 23 allow the execution of offenders under the age of 18. Offenders must be at least seventeen to be sentenced to death in Florida, Georgia, New Hampshire, North Carolina, and Texas. In other states such as Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nevada, Utah, and Virginia the minimum age is sixteen. Juveniles should not be spared of the death penalty because they possess the mental capacity to commit crimes that adults also commit, and some crimes are so heinous that the one who committed it can simply not be rehabilitated. The age of the offender should not have any effect on their punishment, if a juvenile does the crime they have to do the time.
Siding with Warrants for Death Around the world today there are only about ten countries that still practice capital punishment (Criminal Justice); none of which appear on the 2017 Top Ten Highest Murder Rate Countries list by the Mesh News. This goes to show that if the heavy decision of if capital punishment should be embraced or not has entered the minds of many; who, most likely have pondered the effects and humanism of such power. To choose a side in the matter, there must be educated facts, expressed opinions, and a knowledge of both sides, pro and con. People who do not truly know about the death penalty will question why it is such an important controversial topic discussed; but to be genuinely knowledge of the topic would allow a